A clever little malware...


Recommended Posts

I'm having difficulty with one of my client's machines. It seems to have been infected with some extremely vicious malware.

The malware itself is quite subtle. I seek to disable enough of the malware's functions so that my cleanup tools will work.

I don't even have a virus name to reference this by at the moment. Here's what it does:

1. It pops up web browser windows in whatever web browser happens to be open. This includes firefox portable, interestingly enough.

2. It hides the BHOs from HiJackThis. For this reason, I don't have a virus name, as I am unable to look up the .dlls responsible. Hell, if I could get a name for this malware, I could probably kill it.

3. It prevents any internet traffic to certain sites, including *.symantec.com. I didn't browse long, but one of the customer complaints is that "some web sites don't work," so there is probably a list of sites this malware is blacklisting.

4. It makes safe mode crash during boot so safe mode is currently unusable.

Tools at my disposal:

1. Symantec Antivirus Corporate and NOD32, installed on separate clean computers. I tried a Symantec scan and it came up a few files put in there by malware (tdssl.dll in specific) and those were cleaned, but it did not nuke the BHOs' .dll file apparently as HiJackThis is still crippled.

2. HiJackThis with enough knowledge to use it, provided the BHOs are accessible.

3. As mentioned above, I have access to two clean computers. Both of which have autorun turned off, and up-to-date scanners.

4. A flash drive with a write-protect switch.

5. Internet access through a heavily corporate firewall. Additional malware is unlikely to be downloaded when the machine is online.

6. Boot CDs including UBCD4Win and Parted Magic and Ubuntu.

Of course, I could always just nuke the thing, and I probably will anyways to be safe, but this is a first that I've come across something quite this interesting. I've never seen a malware hide the BHOs from HiJackThis before. This is not your typical AntiVirus2008/2009/VistaAntivirus infestation.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/678346-a-clever-little-malware/
Share on other sites

I would also use this tool--- It may have blocked your ctl-alt-del task manager... but it probably didn't block this one.

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinte...s/bb896653.aspx

Process Explorer...

Also I would boot with Ubuntu and mount the drive and check the Local locations--- Temp folders, User Start menu Startup Folder--- as well as manually remove the IE temp Cache. Also Check the USER Desktop to see if it has seeded itself as a Desktop Web Page. Also try running Stinger.exe..(not from Ubuntu) http://vil.nai.com/VIL/stinger/

That would be a good step, however this particular malware does not look like your usual vundo-variant that SmitFraudFix was designed to tackle. Vundo and its variants all seem to have some sort of fake AV or tuneup or registry cleaner UI that pops up and demands money, I don't see any of that with this particular malware... hence me describing it as "subtle."

Another issue is that when I do run SmitFraudFix, I like to do so from Safe Mode, which is currently inaccessible.

EDIT: I forgot to mention that I already cleared out the usual hiding places: The temp folders, and I also looked for suspicious looking folders or files in the program files folder too. Nada.

cmd line possible --sfc /scannow

Also check the hosts file--- It could be as simple as a redirect for all web traffic to their site.

You can use Ubuntu for that one...it opens just like a txt file.

That Hosts file could be the one blocking those websites.

Also try Spybot Search and Destroy.

http://www.safer-networking.org/index2.html

Also a quick edit-- of the hosts file (if you know the site it is taking them to) could block that site and give you the chance to minimize damage (or redownload) of the Software.

Edited by redvamp128

I've been cleaning out machines for 3 years, and in that time, Malwarebyte's Anti-Malware is by far the best software I have used. Disable all start up programs using MSCONFIG, install and run MBAM, remove threats. Boot to safe mode (if possible), update and run MBAM again (as a full scan, not partial), and remove any threats found. You are officially clean. Run AVG free scan to ensure safety. PM me with questions/results! Good luck!

Oh, thanks for replying, I had forgotten I had made this thread. The computer in question has been reformatted and reinstalled already. But this is after I did defeat the virus. Turns out that, according to NOD32, the malware was a virtumonde (Vundo) variant. However, I did find out that I could manually browse to the BHOs in the registry manually by using regedit and then look up their corresponding CLSID via simple search, this allowed me to track down the actual DLL file that was loading as a BHO that prevented HiJackThis from being able to see the BHOs.

NOD32 also was able to detect all the copies of the malware that squirreled themselves away inside the Windows folder. The system looked clean, however there was some funny page rendering problems left in IE which prompted me to wipe and reload the system.

Thanks for the hints everyone.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • qBittorrent 5.2.2 by Razvan Serea The qBittorrent project aims to provide a Free Software alternative to µtorrent. qBittorrent is an advanced and multi-platform BitTorrent client with a nice user interface as well as a Web UI for remote control and an integrated search engine. qBittorrent aims to meet the needs of most users while using as little CPU and memory as possible. qBittorrent is a truly Open Source project, and as such, anyone can and should contribute to it. qBittorrent features: Polished µTorrent-like User Interface Well-integrated and extensible Search Engine Simultaneous search in most famous BitTorrent search sites Per-category-specific search requests (e.g. Books, Music, Movies) All Bittorrent extensions DHT, Peer Exchange, Full encryption, Magnet/BitComet URIs, ... Remote control through a Web user interface Nearly identical to the regular UI, all in Ajax Advanced control over trackers, peers and torrents Torrents queueing and prioritizing Torrent content selection and prioritizing UPnP / NAT-PMP port forwarding support Available in ~25 languages (Unicode support) Torrent creation tool Advanced RSS support with download filters (inc. regex) Bandwidth scheduler IP Filtering (eMule and PeerGuardian compatible) IPv6 compliant Available on most platforms: Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, OS/2, FreeBSD qBittorrent 5.2.2 changelog: FEATURE: Use D-Bus to show file in file managers (Chocobo1) #24340 BUGFIX: Fix friendlyUnitCompact precision calculation (vafada) #24323 BUGFIX: Remove all top-level folders (glassez) #24333 BUGFIX: Use proper API for checking exit status (Chocobo1) #24349 BUGFIX: Delete stale lockfile when hostname mismatch (TurboTheTurtle, glassez) #24363 BUGFIX: Fix wrong removal procedure of watched folder paths (Chocobo1) #24413 BUGFIX: Don't reannounce before interface changes are applied (glassez) #24447 BUGFIX: Use Latin script for Bosnian locale name (Andy Ye) #24342 WEBUI: Fix performance of global checkbox toggling (tehcneko) #24316 WEBUI: Fix Safari transfer list header misalignment (Piccirello) #24377 WEBUI: Fix error when submitting magnet before metadata loads (Piccirello) #24378 WEBUI: Use correct row id when updating Rss Downloader feed selection (Chocobo1) #24402 WEBUI: Use SameSite=Lax for session cookie to fix cross-site login (Piccirello) #24422 WEBUI: Bring back properties panel expand/collapse button (vafada) #24430 WEBAPI: Only use X-Forwarded-Host header when reverse proxy support is enabled (Chocobo1) #24457 RSSS: Fix "RSS Smart Episode Filter" RegEx (nathanon-akk, glassez) #24398 RSS: Fix previously matched episode format (glassez) #24452 WINDOWS: Fix Python fallback search path (TurboTheTurtle) #24325 WINDOWS: NSIS: Allow to install x64 binary on ARM64 (Chocobo1) #24358 Download: qBittorrent 5.2.2 | 41.1 MB (Open Source) Download: qBittorrent 64-bit installer (qt6) | 43.6 MB Links: qBittorrent Home page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Weechat. https://weechat.org/
    • they should stop making bad games that no one asked for
    • Nice rant! Expletive after expletive after expletive. Poor petal, I've touched a nerve. Would you like a tissue to wipe those tears away. Btw, nice one calling Neowin trash. Why would you stick around when you disrespect this site and the people behind it? Just go away if you feel that way.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
    • Reacting Well
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Cosminus earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Year In
      ThatGuyOnline earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      482
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      183
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      123
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      87
    5. 5
      neufuse
      72
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!